TheHonda CB1000Ris aCB series1,000 cc (61 cu in)four-cylinderstandard or nakedmotorcyclemade byHondafrom 2008 to 2016, and resumed from 2018.[1]
![]() 2021 Honda CB1000R SC80 | |
Manufacturer | Honda |
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Production |
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Predecessor | Honda CB900F |
Class |
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History
editIt was unveiled atEICMANovember 2007 as a replacement for theCB900F Hornet,the US-market's 919.[2]
The CB1000R's styling cues are borrowed from the 2007CB600F Hornet.The engine is a detuned version of the 2007CBR1000RRengine, and produces about 81.61 kW (109.44 hp) at the rear wheel.[3]The front suspension uses a 43 mm (1.7 in) inverted HMAS cartridge-typetelescopic forkwith stepless preload with compression/rebound adjustments and 110 mm (4.3 in) travel. The rear is amonoshockwith gas-charged HMAS damper with 10-step preload and stepless rebound damping adjustment and 130 mm (5.0 in) axle travel.
In November 2017, Honda unveiled the new iteration of the CB1000R, along with the CB125R andCB300R.[4][5][6][7]The bike uses a new styling direction dubbed asNeo Sports Café.This design language has been applied before to the CB150R ExMotion and then applied to the CB650R, the successor of theCB650F.
Specifications
edit2008-2016 (SC60)[8] | 2018-present (SC80)[9] | |
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Engine | 998 cc (60.9 cu in)liquid-cooled4-stroke16-valveDOHCinline-four | |
Bore/stroke | 75 mm × 56.5 mm (2.95 in × 2.22 in) | |
Compression ratio | 11.2:1 | 11.6:1 |
Power | 92 kW (123 hp)/10,000rpm (claimed) 81.61 kW (109.44 hp)[3](tested) |
107 kW (143 hp)/10,500rpm (claimed) |
Torque | 99 N⋅m (73 lb⋅ft)/7,750rpm (claimed) 87.38 N⋅m (64.45 lbf⋅ft)[3] |
104 N⋅m (77 lb⋅ft)/8,250rpm(claimed) |
Fuel Tank | 16.2 L (3.6 imp gal; 4.3 US gal) | |
Transmission | 6-speed | |
Frame | Mono-backbone cast aluminum | Mono-backbone steel |
Front suspension | Inverted 43 mm (1.7 in)telescopic fork | 43 mm (1.7 in) Showa SFF-BP fork with spring preload, rebound and compression damping adjustability |
Rear suspension | Single-sidedswingarm,monoshock128mm axle travel | Single-sidedswingarm,monoshock131mm axle travel |
Front Brakes | 2 × 310 mm (12 in)disc,radial 4-pistoncalipers | |
Rear brakes | 256 mm (10.1 in) disc | |
Tires | Front: 120/70–17 Rear: 180/55–17 |
Front: 120/70/17 Rear: 190/55-17 |
Rake/trail | 25°, 98.7 mm (3.89 in) | 25°, 100 mm (3.9 in) |
Wheelbase | 1,445 mm (56.9 in) | 1,455 mm (57.3 in) |
Length | 2,105 mm (82.9 in) | 2,120 mm (83 in) |
Width | 805 mm (31.7 in) | 789 mm (31.1 in) |
Height | 1,095 mm (43.1 in) | 1,090 mm (43 in) |
Seat height | 825 mm (32.5 in) | 830 mm (33 in) |
Kerb weight | 217 kg (478 lb) ABS:222 kg (489 lb) |
212 kg (467 lb) |
References
edit- ^"2021 Honda CB1000R".Honda UK.Retrieved2007-12-01.
- ^Edge, Dirck (2007-11-06)."Honda Rocks Milan With New CB1000R".Motorcycle Daily. Archived fromthe originalon 2007-11-08.Retrieved2007-12-01.
- ^abc"Performance Index Winter '12/'13 Edition"(PDF).Motorcycle Consumer News.Bowtie Magazines. January 2013. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2016-12-29.Retrieved2016-09-12.
- ^"First Look: 2018 Honda CB1000R".6 November 2017.
- ^"2018 Honda CB1000R First Look | 14 Fast Facts".7 November 2017.
- ^"2018 Honda CB1000R Neo Sports Cafe revealed; gets a host of rider aids".7 November 2017.
- ^"2018 Honda CB1000R Unveiled at 2017 EICMA Motor Show: Details, Features, Tech Specs and Image Gallery".7 November 2017.
- ^"2013 CB1000R Press Pack".
- ^"2020 CB1000R".